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Journal ArticleDOI

TFOS DEWS II Sex, Gender, and Hormones Report

TLDR
Overall, sex, gender and hormones play a major role in the regulation of ocular surface and adnexal tissues, and in the difference in DED prevalence between women and men.
Abstract
One of the most compelling features of dry eye disease (DED) is that it occurs more frequently in women than men. In fact, the female sex is a significant risk factor for the development of DED. This sex-related difference in DED prevalence is attributed in large part to the effects of sex steroids (e.g. androgens, estrogens), hypothalamic-pituitary hormones, glucocorticoids, insulin, insulin-like growth factor 1 and thyroid hormones, as well as to the sex chromosome complement, sex-specific autosomal factors and epigenetics (e.g. microRNAs). In addition to sex, gender also appears to be a risk factor for DED. "Gender" and "sex" are words that are often used interchangeably, but they have distinct meanings. "Gender" refers to a person's self-representation as a man or woman, whereas "sex" distinguishes males and females based on their biological characteristics. Both gender and sex affect DED risk, presentation of the disease, immune responses, pain, care-seeking behaviors, service utilization, and myriad other facets of eye health. Overall, sex, gender and hormones play a major role in the regulation of ocular surface and adnexal tissues, and in the difference in DED prevalence between women and men. The purpose of this Subcommittee report is to review and critique the nature of this role, as well as to recommend areas for future research to advance our understanding of the interrelationships between sex, gender, hormones and DED.

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TFOS DEWS II pathophysiology report

TL;DR: The TFOS DEWS II Pathophysiology Subcommittee reviewed the mechanisms involved in the initiation and perpetuation of dry eye disease, finding the targeting of the terminal duct in meibomian gland disease and the influence of gaze dynamics and the closed eye state on tear stability and ocular surface inflammation to be important.
References
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Journal Article

Estrogens, the immune response and autoimmunity

TL;DR: Estrogens appear to play a central role in the immune response and immune-mediated diseases, and the effect of estrogens on the expression of the protooncogenes and oncosuppressor genes involved in programmed cell death might also be relevant to human autoimmunity.
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Dry Eye in the Beaver Dam Offspring Study: Prevalence, Risk Factors, and Health-Related Quality of Life

TL;DR: The prevalence of dry eye and its associated risk factors in the BOSS were similar to previous studies and was associated with lower quality of life on a health-related quality-of-life instrument and the vision-specific NEI VFQ-25.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of ocular surface symptoms from optometric practices in North America.

TL;DR: The results show that symptoms of ocular irritation and visual disturbances were relatively common in this unselected clinical population, which suggested that environmental factors played a role in the etiology of the symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pain genetics: past, present and future

TL;DR: Recent and accelerating progress in, and continuing challenges to, the identification of genes contributing to chronic pain variability are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular basis of androgen insensitivity.

TL;DR: In exon 2 of the androgen receptor gene of a patient with receptor-positive androgen insensitivity, a cytosine-to-adenine transition, converting alanine 564 into an aspartic acid residue, resulted in defective DNA binding and transactivation.
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